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tv   [untitled]    November 28, 2012 6:00am-6:30am EST

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fresh clashes between police and protesters in cairo as violent rallies against prezza norse's decision to see those sweeping powers will be increasingly like the revolution that brought this lems leader to pot. following the examination of former leader yasser arafat the palestinian say if it's proved he was poisoned they'll go to the international criminal court which could become possible if the autonomy is pending between proved un status is granted. and of france and yes of homegrown terrorism are reignited amid a growing number of young locals turning to radical islamic.
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three pm here in moscow you live with our team egyptian security forces guess the demonstrators on to heave square on wednesday morning as the country goes through one of its biggest antigovernment protests since the revolution two years ago tens of thousands of angry gyptian is are accusing president morsi of seeking to impose a new era of dictatorship after he issued a decree last week granting himself near absolute powers archie's time botton is in cairo. a running street battles has been going on in the streets around risk where between a large group of largely young male protesters and the police there all throughout the night there were tear gas canisters being fired into the crowds the protesters picking those up and throwing them back at the police lighting fires in doorways pulling branches off trees to light bows and tearing up large sections of pavement
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creating blocks about the size of a fist to throw at the police as well the police vans this morning absolutely battered by those by those missiles and still going on the police firing tear gas canisters into a group of protesters that was accompanied by essential crow tests that the hard core of that still camped out in the middle of tigris square calling for gyptian president mohamed morsi to rescind that declaration that he made giving himself sweeping powers last thursday which has caused such a furious reaction immersing himself was trying to calm the situation and he said look i'm not the same as my barrack which is what a lot of people are chanting down in the square that you've done the same as mubarak he said i'm not the same these powers are only temporary until egypt can get its constitution and parliament sorted out however that's not really convinced
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many egyptians from the more liberal sections of society protests all over egypt including a number of deaths in these protests go to have to work hard to try and calm these tensions and show people that he really doesn't want these powers permanently as people here fear he does. a live stream showing developments on tahrir square is available for you right now on r.t. dot com meanwhile khaled el son the editor of the al quds al arab newspaper believes the current protest has brought together people of various religious and political beliefs who feel the revolution has been hijacked with morsi. this. divided egypt. civil war
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unfortunately this president is doing the very same things for which. before they are against dictatorship this is what we are looking at now the egyptian people are saying no to the new newly born. looking at this crowd you cannot tell who is muslim or christian who is liberal leftist this is the real people who are saying no to new religious fascism. making the president of. the president and the muslim brotherhood behind him have already lost their credibility they have promised so many things in the past never kept their promises that's why most of these people are in the streets they were talking about over a million up to now because they are not happy with this. they give him president and where he's taking the country is the focus of debate on peter lavelle's cross
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talk show coming up later this hour but the president was elected democratically elected and he has a mandate for change to support could he have. done we don't have a lot to worry about of course is going to be watch you know he made a mistake you took a train for when you just. go to are just going by paying a price politically so many people have given him their votes and the fact of the matter is that these same people who have given him their votes are this in childhood because they do not believe in the value that you can achieve a democracy by a complete dictatorship. palestinian officials say they will take the investigation into the death of the elation leader yasser arafat to the international can court if it's proven he was poisoned his remains were examined on shoes day so a team of scientists could take tissue samples. but they will be tested.
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expected to be revealed. palestinians have been accusing israel of assassinating arafat's since he died in two thousand and four especially from a stroke that there was proceeded by styria illness but israel insists it had nothing to gain from his demise political analyst of monash abuses the new investigation into our fights death could be used as a to cause a rift between rival palestinian political forces if there is a poisoning of president barack had someone must have put the poison in his food or must have put his poison on his skin and to do that it must be someone from his close on to watch and to open this investigation would clear disputes within the fatah movement and within the close people to yasser arafat. are now the closest people to mahmoud abbas so therefore the question is is there
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a political objective on the part of qatar to support such an investigation or is it just an investigation because people really want to know what happened to their leader and they want justice to be you know achieved. while the stakes are high in the probe into arafat's death it comes as palestinian a palestine professor asked the u.n. for nonmember state of the status on tuesday and thursday rather if the bit is approved it would mean international recognition of the palestinian state and give it additional powers by taking issues to the international criminal court and participating in un general assembly debates cheated on me a senior policy analyst at the reason foundation think tank says this move will not help to bring peace in the region any closer. the short run i don't doubt they will make things worse. it really is that we're really been saying that this is an inflammatory for about it in lieu which essentially says that the fellas daniels'
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are not going to live by the events of the men in the fossil record and if that's the case then they feel no need to continue negotiating negotiations are beginning considerations with the palestinians so i think for a while for sure this is not going to help the peace process but you know i think from the palestinian standpoint the freeze peace process was not going anywhere anyway and so the as far as they are concerned they don't have all that much to lose perhaps right now in pushing that probably is really standpoint obviously on one hand not do anything about this move with about about us it doesn't look good it makes them look weak on the other hand if they we couldn't of us any further as actually the foreign minister of israel has been calling and then they lose their only one you know your contention among the palestinians on the whole might probably help us because it will definitely strengthen him with the palestinians and might not hurt him too much with the israelis we've got more
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stories coming up this hour including. the soldier who allegedly fled army secrets to rekey leaks and leaves the military divided over his fate. facebook and twitter increasingly becoming a dangerous tool of expression in the u.k. there's a growing number of prosecutions resulting from a sense of post on social media are going to report from london. do you think before you tweet what if you're in a bad mood or you just have a controversial opinion would you post that as your facebook status you might think that what you type is insignificant considering the last expanse of the internet think again for something that you typed on here you could end up in. paul chambers two years ago the accountant worried that he might not be able to fly due to bad weather tweeted robin hood airport is closed you've got to weaken a bit to get your together otherwise i'm blowing the airport sky high arrested
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questioned for a tower as convicted and find the tweet lost him his job and cost him thousands in lawyers fees chambers case branded the twitter trial true such widespread condemnation that it was eventually overturned by the high court nineteen year old linford house posted a photograph of a burning paper poppy on his facebook page a symbol of remembrance for the soldiers that die in war arrested questioned and held for twenty four hours before being released on bail and we're very worried about people being taken to court for essentially having a fit of bad temper and saying things in an intemperate way i think that's wrong because people start to look over their shoulders and wonder whether they're actually allowed to express the opinions that they're actually whole also worried about the kind of people who are getting these convictions often they are people
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with political views and it's a very bad thing when people start to be told that they can say things because their political views are frightening others the law used to convict most social media offenses was drafted before twitter and facebook were even conceived it was meant to protect individuals from being harassed or threatened over the telephone and free speech or. advocates question how that relates to posting your opinion online the trouble is that when things are post on things like twitter and facebook is that they're there for all to see and for people to share and share the deputy becomes an element of mob rule and then pressure is put on the police forces to act on that rather than abiding to the legal system that we currently heard of teenager matthew woods found out all about more brule off to making offensive tweets about a missing five year old girl an angry crowd gathered outside his house and he was arrested and sentenced to twelve weeks in jail but i don't think anyone ever
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expected political correctness to become a criminal law. if. it's somebody to me i want to be rich but i don't want the director for the police to get to come around in order. to vote for a. grown up to say to us today uses tattletale on each other nor isn't quite sure how to respond to those wanting to test freedom of speech in the u.k. really goes the u.k. is director of public prosecutions has promised to draft new guidelines on how to respond to online offenses but campaigners say that it's not just going to lines but reform that urgently needed if the u.k. is to uphold its freedom of speech online ali boy r t cyberspace. will be back with more international news in just
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a couple of minutes stay with us. invented by the famed soviet author p.d. is good for you is our friend the nine hundred fifty s. these frames were initially used to treat fractures and deformities by cutting bones and slowly pulling them apart and therefore stimulating tissue regeneration it was off was able to reshape arms and legs and people who thought they were crippled for life about a third of patients admitted to the it was out of center now days seeking series three focus magic reasons most of them a man and most are not what you would call vertically challenged professor know because who operated on many of them it usually comes down to man's pride first patient to turn to us with a leg length i mean request to meet is fifteen centimeters to the want to surgery because panos tool than him we like to say that we need to break their legs in
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order to fix their head like lengthening surgeries a band in many countries and even the out there pretty expensive in russia the entire course costs eleven thousand dollars about one tenth of the similar package in the united states financial considerations for one of the reasons that brought this washington state native to western siberia his main motive for the surgery had to do with how he fared in others in america advertised as one seventy five i was one sixty seven or one sixty eight and so one eight centimeters would have brought me right to average for women height isn't so important girl can be sure it's not a big deal like your guy is like expected to be taller just before the operation most this matter a russian girl who found he's a regional hide quite in dealing yet he still want to have had the surgery adding seven more centimeters to he self-confidence she told me the whole time you're
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crazy you're normal you're perfect. so now it's their call your so what a compliment for somebody who's used to falling short of his own expectations. cultures that show a much different and there's a huge musician on the mark when revolutionary dictator in the making president mohammed morsi is presidential decrees granting him wide powers has reopened the debate about.
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to be soo much brighter. moon a song from silence to pressure. me start on t.v. dot com. you're watching r t pretrial hearings have begun in the case of the u.s. on me private bradley manning accused of leaking classified documents to reach leaks with the defense claiming he was the subject of abuse while in detention jayson made a lawyer and author of a book on manning says not all the military are against the alleged whistleblower. both opinion in the military and intelligence and law enforcement is quite divided about this i am not going to lie most people in the military have a very strict by the book attitude towards many of the rules not all the rules but
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many and would like to see many convicted but i have talked with infantry one of whom who is caught on camera in that infamous collateral murder how a cop your video who sees bradley manning is a hero who sees the leaks of the iraq war logs including that helicopter video as an unqualified good because now americans can finally see how that war is actually going in ditto for the afghan war logs there are also people in the f.b.i. who think such a thing is we get leaks is very good for national security and including the former director of the minneapolis office of the f.b.i. co-leader roundly who is a time magazine's person of the year in two thousand and two and i have a long interview in my book with the former top cia analyst ray mcgovern who also sees this public knowledge and it's better fit to the public debate about our war it's to be in in measurable good so there is disagreement that the military and
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intelligence communities about this. we've lined up more details on the case of bradley manning's trial on a website as well as all week you leagues continues to reveal flags of some top officials would rather keep behind closed doors presently do that occasionally. involve a conspiracy between key quite a card companies and some high ranking u.s. politicians. plus twenty six years after the world's worst nuclear catastrophe ukraine is ready to cover the prompter inside once more with a massive containment dome that more. at least thirty four people have been killed and dozens wounded in twin blasts in
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the syrian capital damascus the suspected car bombs went off in the christian district of the city causing extensive damage the area is sort of the stronghold of supporters of the government this is the latest in a series of attacks on damascus normally staged by rebel groups. to some other international news now the head of congo grandma says his forces are getting ready to pull out of the city earlier rebel leaders refused to withdraw from gone after defying an ultimatum from a block of african nations voicing their readiness for further combat meanwhile fresh fighting between mt three militants and allies of the congolese army have been reported around the city. almost two hundred people have taken to the streets of chile's capital san diego to protest a new fishing law protesters say the new legislation discriminates against independent fishermen the unauthorized rally ended in skin issues between demonstrators and police disperse the protesters and arrested at least ten of them
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. athens has once again been swamped by thousands of greeks angered by the bailout deal agreed to by the country's creditors the country will have to be enact more painful measures to get the forty four billion euros needed to save it from defaulting on its loans i may be dead epping says the agreement he held as a breakthrough in that is just a quick fix the figures that has been shown to have been forecasted over the past years have always been too rosy the e.u. and the world and the i.m.f. are very much afraid to public opinion in europe to europe but there will be no growth for the next five or six years to come so we always say there is improvement in economic growth around the corner for sure the corniche not in the reserves not able to fulfill all the requirements they have been put forward and this is the all problem of greece by next year spring of next year all the cuts that have been
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proclaimed now have been announced now will start biting the greek public even more all and will be more protest and will be more a cry for more help or more real out packages were not of the problem in fact i have to admit there are afraid that the problems go to stay around for quite some time. probably ganga's also mounting in the u.k. where trade unions have promised a winter of discontent aimed at the government's austerity drive which is always smith's word to british trade union leader bob crow the full interview is coming up later today but here's a quick preview. we. saw in that workers save enough so enough when people. not be able to afford to go to university their kids not there because social housing or the social benefits bureau troll but if the story. is good to do something about it for it or don't for if you don't for it then
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you're to put up with a positive sign we do want to follow it. the deepening crisis is also having an alarming social impact and fires and people disenchanted with the system are increasingly becoming attracted to radical islam and with a growing number of converts fears of home grown terrorism are also on the rise and . explains. the recent national white police raid on radical islamist groups in france made headlines with a rasta made in all regions the youngest suspected terrorist was only nineteen but it was not the age which shocked so many little men they discovered a network of seven additional people living primarily in paris strasburg and all these people were born in france and are french nationals they are linked to the radical islamist movement police say the group was plotting at least twenty five
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terrorist attacks against jewish organizations and schools and age of twelve detainees were french natives who had converted to radical islam and experts say this worrying trend is the other in place as the financial crisis group's europe and many youth are finding themselves out of work if you go and you say you are excluded and the best way to change your life is to become immersed in it would not work with the majority of course but did the majority there need to have permanent fruits of people converting economic crisis is deepening it probably creates more exclusion and so more people to requote in the mist in communities or to convert to . islam france is not a stranger to combating radical islamist groups since the nineteen fifties it has been countering all jiri in iranian and lebanese terrorists and more recently al qaeda but this is a totally different matter just like most of europe over the years france has grown
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very successful in reinforcing its borders and preventing most of the threat coming from abroad but with more and more homegrown radical organizations appearing. on its soil tracking down possible terrorists with passports would be very hard if not completely impossible to cure it is services believe for now the situation is under control as the conversion to radical islam is still relatively rare but no one can guaranteed stays this way and the number of violent incidents by french muslims is already on the increase our secret service are really well experiments to fight this kind of terrorism and they are watching very carefully the internet the date of the most kids and all the people who are traveling. radical music in countries but this doesn't mean that we will stay safe from any at security specialists claim many arab immigrants living in french suburbs have already had a taste of warfare taking part in different middle eastern conflict over the past
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decade as to what could happen if their experience and views are mixed with the growing anger of native french youths perhaps time will tell lexi russia ski r.t. reporting from paris in france. peter lavelle's here with cross talk after this break. i mean isn't this true even for specialists how a voice can produce several sounds it warms but we didn't use the art of throat singing comes naturally picked up like a language. a
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language of communicating with nature it said that's where throat singing originates from the unions believe not only animals but also surrounding objects like reverse forests and even stones of souls imitating the sounds they believe assumes to capture the power of nature. was. there are special instruments that accompany the singing if gainey says there is even a legend about his instrument a gill it says once there lived a poor shefford who had the best horse that won every competition but jealous people killed it on the horse was revived as an instrument look at those that have some pitiful is because of the spirit of the horse coming to his dream and said make an instrument from the tree the sounding board from the leather of my face the strings. and to remember me make an engraving of my head part of the instrument he
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did so i called the instrument again which means come back and this melody only instrument is called. to fly is one of the most famous groups in the republic their next goal is to tour broad they say for you are p. and since difficult to pick up and sing so i asked them to teach me and see if i can do it. cheerily the senior. chair oh you stand out in that was sure to say can ya who was you think gang are ok. but now it is a moody part of the song and not the actual throat singing which i wouldn't even
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try to repeat. so maybe you have to be born here to be able to sing like this i thought so until i met small she looks like a deveny and i don't even speak their language but she is from japan. most s. too far in mind that you come from two hundred years ago until sappy here she's not planning a professional singing career but she keeps practicing just because it's become part of her nature. and. we welcome the crosstalk on peter lavelle revolutionary or
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a dictator in the making president mohammed morsi is presidential decrease granting him wide powers as we open the debate about the nature and pace the political change in egypt his supporters see him cleaning house of the old regime loyalists morrissey's opponents claim the muslim brotherhood is showing its autocratic impulse. to cross-talk egypt's president i'm joined by while escobar in cairo he is a blogger and a journalist in beirut we have franklin lamb he is director of the americans concern for middle east peace and in washington we cross to ivan eland he is a senior fellow and director of the center on peace and liberty at the independent institute or a german cross-talk rules in effect that means you can jump in anytime you want while and kyra i'd like to go to you first of the president has been widely criticized for his to create expanding his power but others would say it was necessary that political shy.

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